Cass Turnbull's Guide to Pruning: What, When, Where & How to Prune for a More Beautiful Garden

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

This 3rd Edition of Cass Turnbull's Guide to Pruning covers more than twenty additional plants in three new chapters. The result is the new definitive guide for the home gardener with friendly, expert advice from Cass Turnbull, founder of Seattle's PlantAmnesty, whose mission is "to end the senseless torture and mutilation of trees and shrubs caused by mal-pruning."

Nothing about pruning is obvious. In fact, most of it is downright counterintuitive. People try to prune plants like they cut lumber or hair. But that doesn't work to get what they want. Your plants are actually telling you how they want to be pruned and where they need to be planted, if you would just learn to listen to your burning bush. Here are ten commandments for preventing mal-pruning and other gardening sins:

The Ten Gardener Commandments

1. Thou shalt not shear thy bush.

2. Thou shalt not top thy tree.

3. Thou shalt not plant thy sun-lover in the shade, nor thy shade-lover in the sun.

4. Thou shalt mulch.

5. Thou shalt not leave stubs.

6. Thou shalt not flush cut, neither shalt thou paint wounds.

7. Thou shalt not cover up the base of thy plant, or thy tree, or thy shrub. Neither with mulch, nor with soil, nor with any landscape material.

8. Thou shalt cut circling/girdling roots.

9. Thou shalt not compact the root zone of thy tree, nor trench near the trunk of thy tree.

10. Thou shalt not weed-whip the trunk of thy tree, nor bash it with thine mower, nor leave anything tied on thy tree or the branches of thy tree, as is done in the land of the philistines.

With the information in Cass Turnbull's Guide to Pruning, you can approach your trees, shrubs, and other plants with the knowledge that will make your plants grow in healthy and aesthetic ways. The book is organized around the most common types of plants found in Northwest gardens: evergreen and deciduous shrubs; bamboos and tea roses; rhododendrons, camellia, and other tree-like shrubs; hedge plants like boxwood and heather; and clematis, wisteria, and all those vines. It also includes detailed information on trees by species from dogwoods to weeping cherries.

Cass Turnbull is a gardner with a mission, so mind your shears and loppers!

About the Author

Cass Turnbull has been a professional gardener for 20 years. After seeing so many ruined trees and shrubs in her clients' gardens, she founded PlantAmnesty with the mission to teach gardeners (and so-called professional arborists) about the particulars of proper pruning. She has long been the humorous voice of PlantAmnesty through their regular newsletter. She lives in Seattle and lectures around the country on pruning.

What Our Readers Are Saying

Average customer rating based on 1 comment:

JaneBePe, November 21, 2014 (view all comments by JaneBePe)
I bought this book because it was recommended by Dulcy Mahar. (Surely a book recommended by Dulcy Mahar doesn't need a review from me.) It is informative and (surprisingly) also passionate. It was infinitely less boring than most pruning books. Very readable, in fact. It gave me confidence that if, perhaps, I am not able to do the best job of pruning, I can at least do an adequate job of pruning.

It is, as the title states, about a Beautiful garden, meaning, it is not about how to prune your fruit trees. But this basic knowledge will be helpful when you go on to that slightly more complex task. I recommend this book highly.

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